Microsoft tablets through the ages: The good, the bad and the ugly, in pictures
Summary: Windows tablets existed long before the iPad was even dreamt of. Take a tour through some of most popular--and most unusual--devices of the last decade.
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HP Compaq TC1100, 2003
This HP Compaq device — the TC1100 — was seen by many as one of the more successful Tablet PCs. Indeed, some industry watchers would still like to see it return.
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Talkback
Nice
A long list of mediocre products and failures
Ahhh another one
A long list of mediocre posts and failures
Tablet PC, 2005
"Me too" Microsoft even in 2000
I didn't know the iMac
Obviouslly a direct copy of the Newton
Price in pounds....
Pounds are dollars
$349 USD =
0.63140 British Pound per US Dollar
http://ca.moneycentral.msn.com/investor/market/crncconverter.asp?iCurIdFrom=1&iCurIdTo=3&dAmt=349
I think
"Windows tablets existed long before the iPad was even dreamt of"
Since very beginning, Jobs had different concept of tablet, comparing to the very first concept by his friend and colleagure Alan Kay (Jobs hired Kay to work for Apple). While Kay envisioned tablet as a plate with physical keyboard, Jobs wanted it do be drawn, freely customizable part of screen.
This Jobs' idea turned out to be one of the greatest IT inventions, ever, and it certainly influenced/will influence daily lives of billions of people.
Besides iPad, Apple produced Newton MessagePAD, the first tablet/PDA with
Solely thanks to Newton, the world has ARM architecture
Apple did the same trick with PowerPC architecture -- Apple needed RISC-based desktop CPU, and they found workstation class Power-architecture by IBM to downscaled to desktop. The architecture became so code/power efficient that since that time it became third most used in the history of IT -- after ARM and Intel, which is the most used.
One more fact about the Newton
It Did!
Eat Up Martha!
You're weird
How's the crow tasting? ;)
And you're almost always
Facts and the idiots that make them (up)
One could characterize it as a failure relative to Apple's current state of affairs, but that is hardly a fair comparison.
(In addition, of course, it suffered from competing against itself, in the form of similar products from other companies, such as the PenPad and the Palm, which were inspired when Apple CEO Sculley couldn't hold his tongue and spilled the beans about the Newton Project two years prior to it's slated release.)
Oh, and FTR, it wasn't even named the Newton.